You are not purchasing anything when you back a kickstarter project. You are backing a project you would like to see succeed. In return, based on how much you have contributed, you MAY be promised a reward in thanks. Of course any serious amount of money, or generally anything even over €10 is going to get you something. The point is it is not a pre-order system. Anyone that actually expects a project to be completed on time and within budget is only fooling themselves. Even with the most careful planning and best of intentions no one can forsee every problem and many of those behind kickstarters are inexperienced (obviously not FD) so they are learning on the job which will slow things down.
By backing a kickstarter project you are not buying a definitive product, you are donating money to help get a project done in the hope that it will meet expectations but in the knowledge that aspects of the project may change due to funding, unexpected difficulties, over optimistic goals, problems with suppliers, manufacturing (mostly done in China which is an absolute nightmare to deal with for small companies) and anything else the universe will hit you with. You are backing a concept which will hopefully match your vision or at least come close.
After a period of expensive kickstarter use I no longer back anything as I know it will either most likely fail to meet expectations (Tomorrow from Conquistador games), miss its deadline by a couple of years (Kingdom: Death) but mostly because the product will be available much cheaper after it is released (Godus) and most of the KS exclusive rewards turn out to be rubbish that contribute nothing to the product (in one case the KS excl. components were actually so bad and unsuitable the standard cardboard cutouts were superior, Tomorrow again).
By backing a kickstarter project you are not buying a definitive product, you are donating money to help get a project done in the hope that it will meet expectations but in the knowledge that aspects of the project may change due to funding, unexpected difficulties, over optimistic goals, problems with suppliers, manufacturing (mostly done in China which is an absolute nightmare to deal with for small companies) and anything else the universe will hit you with. You are backing a concept which will hopefully match your vision or at least come close.
After a period of expensive kickstarter use I no longer back anything as I know it will either most likely fail to meet expectations (Tomorrow from Conquistador games), miss its deadline by a couple of years (Kingdom: Death) but mostly because the product will be available much cheaper after it is released (Godus) and most of the KS exclusive rewards turn out to be rubbish that contribute nothing to the product (in one case the KS excl. components were actually so bad and unsuitable the standard cardboard cutouts were superior, Tomorrow again).
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